Phomemo Portable Printer,M832 Mobile Wireless Ther
Original price was: $109.99.$59.29Current price is: $59.29.
Price: $109.99 - ($59.29 / Count)
(as of Mar 24, 2025 00:10:32 UTC – Details)
From the brand
Phomemo 2024 Flagship Printer
Phomemo is specialized in portable printer, label maker and thermal paper, thermal labels.
M832 portable printer is Phomemo 2024 flagship thermal printer. Upgrade printing resolution , battery capacity and more. Smaller 80% than traditional printer, portable and compact design is ideal for taking anytime and anywhere to enjoy printing on the go
M832 Thermal Roll Paper
M832 Thermal Paper
Record Sweet Moments
For Business Travel
Phomemo M832 Portable Printer
M832 Case & Small Size Paper
For Children Study Material
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Phomemo Thermal Paper 8.5″x11″
3.03” Sticker Thermal Paper
2.08” Sticker Thermal Paper
Color Thermal Paper
2024 Upgrade Portable Printer – The M832 portable wireless printer from Phomemo is the 2024 flagship thermal portable printer that can print 8.5” x 11” US Letter size, A4, 4.33”, 3.14”, and 2.08” width paper to meet over 95% of printing needs. Its small and portable design features a built-in 2600mAh rechargeable battery, allowing you to print 150 sheets of 8.5” x 11” paper. Efficient printing saves you time and costs
Phomemo M832 Printer Set – This wireless no-ink printer comes with a printer storage case and 4 rolls of different size sample thermal paper (including 8.5 x 11” paper, 4.33”, 3.14”, and 2.08” width thermal paper,3 rolls are in the printer case, and the other is in the printer). With this printer set, you can experience all the paper sizes that the printer supports. The M832 is an all-rounder printer, just like you.
Strong Compatibility – This thermal inkless printer is compatible with phones and laptops. Phones support connection via Bluetooth with a range of up to 33 feet, while laptops connect via USB data cable. The portable thermal printer cannot connect to two or more devices at the same time
Easy-to-Use Thermal Printer – Download the “Phomemo” app and connect via Bluetooth. One-click printing saves time and effort. You can edit and typeset the documents or photos you want, supporting batch printing and direct web page printing to improve work efficiency. (Attention: The inkless thermal printer only supports mobile devices (phones and tablets) connecting via Bluetooth; laptops and PCs should connect using a USB data cable.)
Durable Wireless Printer – A good helper for home, office, travel, and more applications. The printer is suitable for printing documents for clients, receipts, contracts, learning materials, pictures, etc., making your business run faster. It’s a great choice for yourself or as a gift for business partners, women, girls, children, family, and friends .
Phone and Tablet Start Print – Step 1: Download the App ‘Phomemo’. Step 2: Turn on the M832 printer and your phone’s or tablet’s Bluetooth. Step 3: Click the ‘Printer’ icon in the App to search for the M832 portable printer, connect it via Bluetooth in the App, and select the paper size and file type to start printing
Laptop/PC Starts Printing – Step 1: Please check your laptop/PC’s operating system (OS) and download and install the correct M832 driver from the Phomemo website. Step 2: Use the USB data cable to connect the M832 printer to your computer. Step 3: Select and open your document, and choose M832 from the printer list
9 reviews for Phomemo Portable Printer,M832 Mobile Wireless Ther
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Original price was: $109.99.$59.29Current price is: $59.29.
Don’t be a spoon licker –
Pretty good printer for what it is
This is a pretty good printer for what it is. I was not made for photos and really detailed heavy printing like ink jets but the poor thing sure tries. It just doesn’t have enough heat to keep up the print before it fizzles out and the picture starts fading out like “it ran out of ink”Only thing I don’t like about it is that it doesn’t rest itself after each page so if you’re printing off of the fan fold paper eventually things get off track and your file or image creeps closer and closer to the edge and every 2 or 3 pages you have to stop and adjust the paper. I don’t like the rolls because they well, roll and I don’t want to do single sheet because I’d have to feed one in for every single page and that is just too much for me.I do like this printer though. I don’t have to do much printing and it’s rare but when I need to it is inconvenient to go somewhere to find a pri ter to use so I bought this. Not much to complain about. It’s easy to use and the app is easy. Connects with no issues for me. Just don’t get this with high expectations of great prints like ink jet. This is basic stuff for the most part but it does really good for just that.
Brad –
Thermal technology has limitations, but it’s implemented well in this printer
Despite seeing only sponsored Vine reviews, I went ahead and decided to give this printer a shot since I knew Amazon would make returning easy if I needed to. The printer doesn’t quite give the quality I’d dream of, but it definitely is usable and is a worthy competitive option. Before I get too far into my review, let’s review the leading printing technologies as of Dec 2023:— Inkjet. If you’ve ever printed in color, this is probably what you’ve used. It’s really the only color game on the market, that’s its selling point. This technology works by spraying your paper with finely controlled jets of ink. It works well, but I personally am daunted by needing to have 3 consumables just to keep them running: color ink, black ink, and printer paper. I also don’t love that printer companies make it so difficult to purchase these consumables from 3rd parties, and hate that some are even trying to put arbitrary expiry dates on said consumables to keep you trickling your income their way.— Laser. The black and white backbone. These printers work by depositing toner on your paper and curing it with a laser. As you guessed, these only have 2 consumables: toner and printer paper, but this comes at the cost of limiting you to black and white printing only. However, this tech also works well (good quality) and abusive business policies aren’t quite as rampant here.— Thermal. The backbone of manufacturing and operations teams everywhere. When you get a receipt for your groceries or your hamburger, chances are it was printed on a thermal printer. These work by using heat to cause chemical reactions in special paper (not printer paper) which cause them to darken, creating (again) a black and white image. The detail possible with thermal printers is notably lower than the other two technologies, but it’s still serviceable. The big selling point here is that you drop down to only a single consumable: thermal printer paper. That, and because there are no moving parts required to move any nozzles or lasers around, the devices can be quite small (think of the size of a home printer vs a receipt printer at a fast food restaurant).Thermal printing has been historically targeted at businesses and is a growing market for consumers. A few years back, if you wanted an 8.5 x 11″ printer, you could really only choose between inkjet and laser. If you wanted color, you wanted an inkjet. If you didn’t, you wanted a laser. That decision tree is mostly still the same, except nowadays you have two options if you don’t care for color: still laser, but also thermal.So, between the two, how do you know which is right for you? Well, there are three larger items to consider:— Quality. As I mentioned, the quality of prints you get on this thermal printer are in line with thermal tech, but thermal tech is not as great as laser tech. Prints you’ll get from a thermal printer are definitely usable. If you want to print return labels, simple documents, etc, a thermal printer is totally fine. However, if you want very presentable print quality, I would personally go for a laser. I do sometimes need this, but very rarely. In those rare situations, I personally am totally fine going to a print shop and paying a small fee to use their printer.— Size. Thermal printers can be very small. They just need to be big enough to move paper across a thermal print head. That usually only requires one motor with a few other supporting components. Laser (and ink jet printers) have to be a bit larger. They’re slinging other things around and they need some space to do so. They also need space to store toner/ink. I personally live in a fairly small apartment and am super interested in keeping things as small as possible.— Consumables. Thermal printers only need one consumable: thermal paper. Laser printers need two: printer paper, and toner. If you run out of paper, you can’t print. If you run out of toner, you can’t print. Storing backup quantities of those things also takes up space (linking back to the size topic). I personally enjoy the simplicity of thermal printing – if I have paper, I can print. If I don’t, I can’t. Thermal paper is usually in rolls (it is for this printer), and so storing backup quantity is pretty easy.Some other things you might consider are:—Your support of consumer abuse. Many big printer companies are trying lots of “innovative” ideas to keep consumers sending cash their way. If you buy their printers/consumables, you fuel their crusades. Thermal printers are pretty safe in this regard today (big companies haven’t figured out how to strangle this yet). Phomemo, for example, (the brand of this printer) seems to be pretty respectable (as of Dec 2023). If you decide a laser/ink printer is more up your alley, I’d recommend the brand Brother (as of Dec 2023). They seem much more reasonable in their respect for consumers than some other ink/laser brands.—Portability. You can use a thermal printer on the road (literally in a moving vehicle if you wanted, but also in a hotel or other location after traveling). You’ll struggle to do the same with inkjet or laser.—Maintenance. Printers are pretty solid but simpler systems are usually more reliable. There’s only some many things that can break in a thermal printer. There are quite a few more things that can break in an ink/laser printer.If you’ve read through all this and decided thermal is right for you, then I do recommend this M832 printer. I’ve only printed a few pages on it but it seems to work well. Getting it setup took ~3min (feed paper, install driver, click print). One feature I like about the M832 vs some others is that it supports printing on both internally-stored rolled paper and external-fed precut sheets. Internal roll is pretty common for most thermal printers (again, think fast food receipt), but it’s not always a given once you get to large 8.5×11 sizing. Some may prefer external feed paper, as it means your sheets all have very clean edges by default (to remove a sheet from a roll print, usually you tear it using the built-in tearing blade which leaves a zigzag edge – you could alternatively cut it off with scissors but I personally don’t care). I like roll printing as it means everything needed to print is all stored in the printer – much easier to store and use and store again. By the way – this printer also supports smaller sizes (again, think of receipts). This said, I’m not sure if roll diameter is a concern for other sizes: the 8.5×11 rolls seem to be a fairly modest diameter which I think is smaller than some other thermal roll diameters. I plan to test this. I also appreciate that this printer uses USB-C (all other USB style connectors are becoming obsolete, for good reason). Although I bought a grey unit, I also think it’s fun that there are colors available. I could see myself buying a colorful unit if the right color mix was available. Lastly, I appreciate that I can use this connected to a PC like a normal printer. The only negative I could think of is that, personally I could have done without the printer having a built-in battery (everyone has USB battery banks these days if mobile printing was needed). I think the cost reduction of pulling the battery and supporting components out could have made the printer able to reach the budget of more consumers, all the while making it a more environmentally friendly device, but product development is complicated so it’s hard to say if I’m right or wrong (maybe some consumers don’t want to use USB battery pack for that purpose).
jozey hall –
Cool little printer and high quality prints. App has some issues.
I used this a few times now for work.Overall i would rate it a 3.8/5My job requires me to print sign-off sheets once work is completed.This seems like the absolute best choice for such a purpose because it is portable, connects to my phone and will not run out of ink. As far as i know Phomemo have a lot of different models of thermal printer, and they seem to be one of only a handful of manufacturers. I chose to stay away from other big name brands like epson and canon because those are very expensive and probably not much better.Using the Phomemo app you must select which files to print, just like a regular printer, however i have had problems with this process as some documents are not supported. I don’t know why, i am selecting the correct .pdf format, but it doesn’t print. It may be due to the pdf file being locked or edited or something, i have no idea. But i have had like 90% of the prints are successful and the printer itself seems to be working great mechanically, just the app is kinda annoying and has some pop up windows and ads and should be improved.I have had a lot of problems with inkjet printers (HP, Epson) in the past because i would let them sit and the ink would dry out, then the whole printer and cartridge would need repair, often costing more than replacing the whole printer which made me very frustrated. The cost of ink far outweighs the cost of thermal paper when doing a direct comparison. Thermal printers also seem much more reliable.
Misty Mortensen –
Compact printer
I love this printer, so easy to hook up and it works with both my Google pixel phone and Samsung tablet. I love that I don’t have to buy ink, the compact and durable design. I bought the ream of paper to go with it. Good price for the value, I tried a few others and had a hard time connecting.
Raphaelle –
imprimante ultra pratique pour les déplacements : prend très peu de place et est facile d utilisationbon rapport qualité prix : utile pour impression des codes barre des flash codes des etiquettes d expeditionimprime uniquement en noir et blancpermet d’economiser largement car les cartouches d encre sur les imprimantes basiques sont hors de prix et l’encre baisse rapidement
Tiffany Ferreira –
Très bonne qualité d’impression.Je l’utilise également pour mes feuilles transfert à tatouage, marque très bien.Son application est facile d’utilisation, on peut également la brancher à l’ordinateur. Elle est vendue avec une pochette toute douce Je recommande
Antonio –
Wirklich top wenn man nur gelegentlich etwas drucken muss. Auch die mitgelieferte Box ist qualitativ hochwertig.
Concepción –
Manejable y muy práctica, ideal para transportar y para trabajos que no requieren de una alta calidad, aunque la impresión es bastante óptima, un producto ideal si continúa evolucionando y perfeccionándose técnicamente en todos los aspectos.
Elle518 –
Hace poco adquirà esta impresora térmica portátil y no podrÃa estar más contenta con la compra. Es muy fácil de usar y me resultó sencillo conectarla tanto al Mac como al iPad.Pero lo que más me gusta es su increÃble portabilidad y diseño compacto, lo que la hace ideal para llevar a todas partes, sobre todo en mi caso que viajo bastante.La calidad de impresión es sorprendentemente nÃtida para una impresora térmica. Los textos salen perfectamente legibles. Además, no requiere tinta, lo que supone un ahorro considerable a largo plazo.Otro aspecto que me ha gustado es su velocidad de impresión. Además, los materiales de los que está hecha parecen de buena calidad.La verdad es que esta impresora ha superado mis expectativas. Recomiendo totalmente su compra.PD: un 10 para el servicio técnico, me surgieron algunas dudas sobre su uso y me las resolvieron súper rápido.